OPINION
Dеfendants Daniel Palmadessa (“Daniel”), Donald Palmadessa (“Donald”), William Pal-madessa (‘William”), Supreme Recycling, Inc. (“Supreme”), and Fortune Interior Dismantling Corp. (“Fortune”) (collectively, the “Defendants”) have moved for an order: (1) holding Plaintiffs Red Ball Interior Demolition Corp. (“Red Ball”) and John Palmadessa (“John”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) in contempt for failure to comply with this Court’s June 25, 1996 Order; (2) ordering Defendants released pursuant to the terms of a release submitted by Defendants to Plaintiffs; and (3) awarding counsel. fees and costs.
Defendant Daniel Palmadessa (“Daniel”) has also moved to compel Plaintiffs to indemnify Daniel Palmadessa the amount of $9,956, as well as counsel fees and costs. Plaintiffs have opposed on various grounds and demand a jury trial on the issue of whether the notice of claim was untimely under an indemnity agreement between the parties.
For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ motions for contempt, for an order of release, and for counsel fees and costs will be denied. Daniel’s motion for indemnification will be granted, and his motion for counsel fees and costs will be denied. John’s request for a jury trial will be denied. In addition, the June 25 Order will be amended to clarify the obligations of the parties thereunder.
The Parties
Plaintiff John founded the family carting and demolition business which became Red Ball in 1958. He is Red Ball’s sole shareholder at present. Defendant Daniel is John’s brother and was his partner in several family businesses, including Red Ball. Daniel and John both reside in New Jersey. Daniel’s sons, defendants Donald and William, were employed by Red Ball and later incorporated Supreme and Fortune, both of which are New Jersey corporations.
Facts and Prior Proceedings
The factual and procedural background of this case is fully described in the prior opinions of this Court, familiarity with which is assumed.
See Red Ball Interior Demolition Corp. v. Palmadessa,
On May 7, 1996, the parties entered into a settlement agreement (the “Settlement”) that was placed on the record before this Court. The Court stated its intention to retain jurisdiction to enforce the Settlement. An order of dismissal (the “Dismissal”) “[pjursuant to the settlement hearing held in Court 5-7-96” was signed by this Court on May 8,1996 and entered by the Clerk on May 9,1996.
The Settlement includеd provisions calling for payment of a sum of money by Daniel Palmadessa, the execution of a release of claims by all parties, and the indemnification of Daniel Palmadessa by John and Red Ball for liabilities arising from the business of Red Ball and several other business ventures in which the parties were involved. The indemnification provision expanded the scope of an existing “Agreement of Indemnification” between John and Daniel Palmadessa, entered into on June 2, 1994 (the “June 1994 Agreement”). The June 1994 Agreement provided that it would be governed by New York law. The Settlement also provided that the sums paid by Daniel under the Settlement would go into trust to be used to satisfy Daniel’s claims for indemnification. Upon expiration of the trust term, the trust remainder is payable to John Palmadessa as beneficiary.
Paragraph 2 of the preexisting June 2 Agreement provides:
Claim Procedure. If any indemnified claim shall be asserted, notice of such claim shall be given by Daniel to John (and vice versa) as soon as practicable after Daniel (or John) receives knowledge thereof ...
[I]f Daniel requests, John shall litigate or otherwise contest such claim on behalf of Daniel, in good faith and without unnecessary delay at his own expense and with counsel of his choice ...
[I]f Daniel fails to litigate or otherwise contest such claim, John shall have the right, acting in good faith and without unnecessary delay, to litigate or otherwise contest such claim ...
On or about May 24, 1996, Dеfendants transmitted a certified cheek in the amount of $492,641.19, payable to “William Dunnegan as attorney for Red Ball Interior Demolition and John Palmadessa.” They also transmitted a Release and a Stipulation of Settlement and Discontinuance.
Plaintiffs refused to execute the Release and refused to negotiate the cheek. On June 7,1996, Plaintiff John moved: (1) to have the release proposed by Daniel redrawn, on the ground that the proposed Release was overly broad; (2) to have the check redrawn, on the ground that it granted Red Ball a property right in the trust account, when that was not the intent of the Agreement; and (3) to compel Daniel to deliver the original notes to John. On June 19, 1996, Defendants filed a cross motion to compel John Palmadessa, individually and as corporate officer of Red Ball and several other corporate entities named as releasors in Defendants’ proposed Release, to accept the tendered check and execute the Release.
By order dated June 25, 1996 (the “June 25 Order”), this Court denied Plaintiffs’ motion and granted Defendants’ cross-motion. The Order, in its entirety, read:
Plaintiffs having moved and Defendants having cross-moved on June 25, 1996, for enforcement of their settlement agreement of May 7,1996, Plaintiffs motion is denied. Defendants’ motion for counsel fees and costs is denied. Defendants’ motion is otherwise granted.
Plaintiffs subsequently failed to comply with the June 25 Order, but placed an executed Release complying with the Order in escrow, pending the outcome of Plaintiffs’ anticipated appeal. They also proposed an alternative release.
By letter dated July 10, 1996, Daniel Pal-madessa requested indemnification from John for Red Ball tax liabilities deducted from Daniel’s personal income tax refund by the State of New York. The State notified Daniel in Octоber 1995 that he would be held liable for the Red Ball taxes, but the amounts were not deducted from his refund until November 3,1995.
*120 On July 22, 1996, Plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal, seeking review of the June 25 Order. The Court of Appeals has docketed the appeal as number 96-7896. The same day, Defendants filed their instant motion, seeking an order: (1) holding Plaintiffs in contempt; (2) releasing Defendants pursuant to the terms of the Release; and (3) granting attorneys’ fees and costs to Defendants. On July 25, 1996, Daniel Palmadessa filed the instant motion seeking an order compelling Plaintiffs to reimburse him for the amount deducted from his state tax refund. On August 1, 1996, Plaintiffs filed a cross motion for a stay of the June 25 Order pending appeal and made a demand for a jury trial on the issue of whether Daniel gave notice of his claim , for indemnification within the time required by the indemnity agreement. Oral argument was heard on September 18, 1996. Plaintiffs cross motion for a stay was denied by memorandum endorsement at oral argument. Post-argument submissions were rer eeived through October 2, 1996, at which time the matter was deemed fully submitted. Discussion
I. The Contempt Motion
A. Jurisdiction
The Defendants’ contempt motion raises the threshold question of whether the Plaintiffs’ notice of appeal of the June 25 Order deprives this Court of jurisdiction to enforce the order through civil contempt.
“In general, filing of a notice of appeal confers jurisdiction on the court of appeals and divests the district court of control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.”
Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
However, this Court has jurisdiction to impose contempt sanctions for disobedience of an order currently on appeal. The filing of a notice of appeal “only divest[s] the district court of jurisdiction respecting the questions raised and decided in the order appealed from.”
New York State National Org. for Women v. Terry,
Thus, a district court remains vested with the ability to enforce an order, even while the order is
sub judice
before the reviewing court.
See Petersen v. Vallenzano,
Accordingly, the notice of appeal does not deprive this Court of jurisdiction to entertain the contempt motion.
B. Plaintiffs Will Not Be Held in Contempt
The Court may hold a party in civil contempt where there is a “clear and unambiguous order, noncomplianee is proved clearly and convincingly, and ‘the defendant has not been reasonably diligent and energetic in attempting to accomplish what was ordered.’”
Drywall Tapers, Local 1974 v. Local 530,
For an оrder to be sufficiently specific to warrant a finding of contempt, the party alleged to have disobeyed the order “must be able to ascertain from the four corners of the order” what acts are required or forbidden.
See Drywall Tapers,
Although this Court is of the oрinion that the actions required by the June 25 Order should have been clear to the parties, the Order operates by reference to the motion papers, and does not expressly'set forth its requirements within the four corners of the Order. Therefore, a contempt order is inappropriate at this time.
However, to clarify the obligations of the parties for the future, the June 25 Order will be amended. By granting Defendants’ motion on June 25, 1996, this Court ordered Plaintiffs: (1) to еxecute the general release submitted to them by Defendants and (2) to accept a certified cheek in the amount of $492,641.19 made payable to “William Dun-negan as attorney for Red Ball Interior Demolition and John Palmadessa,” which was tendered on or about May 24, 1996. The June 25 Order is hereby amended aecordingly.
II. The Motion to Release Defendants
Plaintiffs’ notice of appeal deprives this Court of jurisdiction to enter a release on the terms proposed by Defendants and enforced by this Court in the June 25 Order. To resolve the issues raised by Defendants’ motion, it would be necessary to address issues of the proper interpretation of the release provisions of the Settlement Agreement. These are the very issues to be resolved in the Plaintiffs’ appeal of the June 25 Order, and thus may not be considered during the pendency of that appeal.
See Marrese,
III. The Motion to Compel Payment to Daniel Palmadessa
A- Jurisdiction
Daniel Palmadessa’s claim for indemnification raises two threshold jurisdictional questions: (1) whether there is any basis of federal subject-matter jurisdiction to enforce the indemnity agreement; and (2) whether the notice of appeal deprives the district court of this jurisdiction during the pendency of the appeal.
Plaintiffs contend that the Court does not have jurisdiction to enforce the indemnity agreement because the Settlement merely modified án existing private indemnification agreement over which the Court had no prior jurisdiction. They contend that, while the Court retained jurisdiction to enforce the Settlement, it did not thereby assert or acquire jurisdiction over the private indemnity agreement modified by the Settlement. Moreover, they contend that there is no diversity jurisdiction over the indemnity claim, *122 since John and Daniel are now both residents of New Jersey and the amount in controversy does not satisfy the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1382.
In
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
The parties do not dispute that this Court retained jurisdiction to enforce the Settlement. The Settlement was put on the record before the Court at a hearing on May 7,1996; at that hearing, the Court expressed its intention, to which the parties assented, to enforce the Settlement; and the Court’s order of dismissal stated that dismissal was “pursuant to the settlement hearing,” at which the Court retained jurisdiction. Accordingly, this Court has jurisdiction to enforce the Settlement.
Compare, Scelsa,
The remaining question is whether, by properly retaining jurisdiction to enforce the settlement, this Court acquired jurisdiction over the indemnification agreement, the basic terms of which were agreed to on June 2, 1994.
This Court has jurisdiction over John’s agreement to indemnify Daniel. The doctrine of ancillary jurisdiction permits a federal court to assert jurisdiction over a claim when it is necessary to “enable a court to function successfully, that is, to manage its proceedings, vindicate its authority, and effectuate its decrees.”
Kokkonen,
511 U.S. at -,
Therefore, there is federal subject matter jurisdiction to enforce the indemnity provisions of the Settlement.
The notice of appeal does not deprive this Court of jurisdiсtion over the issues raised by the indemnification claim. The issues on appeal relate to the interpretation of the Settlement’s payment and release provisions. These provisions are unrelated to the indemnification provisions at issue here.
B. John Will Be Ordered to Indemnify Daniel
John argues that Daniel’s claim for indemnification should be denied on the merits *123 because Daniel failed to give John notice of the claim “as soon as practicable” after he became aware of it. In the alternative, John demands a jury trial, pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 38, on the issue of whether Daniel’s notice met the requirements of paragraph 2 of the indemnity agreement.
John’s arguments assume that prompt notice is a condition precedent to his obligation to indemnify Daniel. However, under New York law, “[a] contractual duty ordinarily will not be construed as a condition precedent absent clear language showing that the parties intended to make it a condition.”
Unigard Security Ins. Co. v. North River Ins. Co.,
The June 1994 Agreement does not expressly condition John’s duty upon the promptness of Daniel’s notice, nor does John make any claim of prejudice arising from the allegedly delinquent notice of the deduction from Daniel’s taxes.
Nonetheless, it might be argued that the prоmpt notice provision in this case should be construed as a condition precedent to John’s obligation to indemnify Daniel for a claim. Certainly, John’s duty to indemnify Daniel for a claim is necessarily conditioned upon his receiving notice of the claim, but not necessarily upon his receiving prompt notice. Without notice, John could not be aware of his obligation to pay. However, there is no similarly compelling reason that John cannot indеmnify Daniel for a claim merely because notification is delayed.
However, the indemnification agreement permits John to contest or litigate claims against Daniel that are subject to indemnification. It could be argued that the prompt notice provision should be treated as a condition precedent to John’s obligation to indemnify Daniel, because prompt notice is necessary to permit John to effectively exercise his right to contest the claim.
New York insurance law provides a possible analogy to support such a reading of the prompt notice provision. Under New York law, a notice provision in an insurance contract operates as a condition precedent; an insurer need not show prejudice to rely on the defense of late notice.
See Security Mut. Ins. Co. v. Acker-Fitzsimons Corp.,
Courts have justified the rule that notice provisions in insurance contracts are to be construed as conditions precedent on several grounds. Prompt notice permits insurers to protect themselves against fraudulent claims by timely investigation while witnesses and evidence are still available, enables insurers to better maintain sufficient reserve funds by making early estimates of potential exposure, and facilitates settlements by giving insurers early control over claims.
See Unigard,
Howevеr, despite some superficial similarities between the indemnification agreement and insurance contracts, this Court declines to create a new exception to the general rule that contractual obligations ■ are to be construed as independent promises, rather than conditions precedent to performance. The New York Court of Appeals has declined to extend the insurance exception to reinsuranсe contracts.
See Unigard,
Here, John has no obligation to litigate on Daniel’s behalf (unless Daniel expressly requests that he do so). John’s right to contest a claim, like the reinsurer’s right to participate in the litigation and investigation of a claim, is insufficient to create a presumption that prompt notice is a condition precedent to John’s obligation to pay. Because John has failed to allege any prejudice from the delay, Daniel’s allegedly late notice, even if it did not satisfy his obligation to provide notice “as soon as practicable,” does not excuse John from paying the claim.
Furthermore, John’s request for a jury trial on the issue of whether Daniel satisfied the prompt notice provision will be denied. Since the prompt notice provision is not a condition precedent to John’s obligation to pay and John alleges no prejudice from the delay, it is irrelevant whether Daniel satisfied the provision in this case. Thus, there is no material factual issue for a jury to decide.
See American Home Assurance,
IV. The Motions for Counsel Fees and Costs Will Be Denied
The parties’ applications for counsel fees and costs will be denied. The parties’ claims and defenses were not frivolous, and no purpose would be served by awarding fees and costs in this dispute.
Conclusion
For all of the foregoing reasоns, Defendants’ motion for contempt is hereby denied; Defendants’ motion for an order releasing them in accordance with their proposed Release is hereby denied; and Defendants’ motion for attorney’s fees and costs is hereby denied. Daniel Palmadessa’s motion for indemnification in the amount of $9,956.00 is hereby granted. His motion for attorney’ fees and costs is hereby denied. John Pal-madessa’s demand for a jury trial is hereby denied. In addition, this Court’s June 25 Order is hereby amended in accordance with this Opinion.
Settle order on notice.
It is so ordered.
